Boundary: Low Orbital Warfare: REPORT 2
The Office was a
bonus.
Located within the
military sector of Station Four’s artificial gravity ring, the headquarters of
the newly christened 31st Task Force was one of the most difficult places to
find within the structure. Through the Offices of the 4th Task Force, past Rear
Admiral Nokolai Markov’s personal cubicle and beyond the door into a storage
area was the true entrance to the allocated space.
Forgotten to the
universe, it seemed as if the dusty room dated all the way back to the original
construction of the station. Bolted down furniture was arranged in a classical
open office style, empty workstations completely unused. A thin layer of
settled particulate matter is suddenly disturbed, a breeze rushing into the
musty space from a door kicked open.
Light spills
through the area in thin, dusty shafts; Admiral Tucker attempting to find the
switch as he reaches in with an extended arm.
In a small click
the office illuminates, a handful of bulbs in the ceiling immediately burning
out.
“Open season, you
pick your table.” The Admiral waves as he cheerfully walks into the area. “I
call the corner one though.”
A total of sixteen
prefabricated workstations were lined facing together in two rows of seven. Two
of them were displaced, one facing directly at the entrance as a reception desk
while the other sat at the far side of the room facing the rest in a seat of
power.
The walls direct
front and right to the entrance were coated in the classical beige impact
resistant rubber, while the left was taken up by a gigantic one-and-a-half-meter
tall whiteboard that spanned the entire length of the room. Oddly, the entrance
wall was equipped with a short shelf, which immediately was occupied by duffle
bags of belongings.
“This is…
interesting.” Ling comments as he runs his hand on one of the workstations, the
dusty plastic texturing mimicking a wooden construct. “This style of office I
do not like. Too impersonal.”
Lieutenant Keys kneels
at the foot of a table as he narrows his eyes to the small screw tips,
identifying them almost immediately. “These are R11 non-invasive securing
bolts. And given the thickness of the floor, we could rearrange some furniture
if we wanted to.”
“Combat Engineer
already at it huh?” The Admiral laughs as he sits on his claimed chair.
“Suppose we could do a little rearranging.”
“Well I need an
AM-400 form for rearranging the R11 bolts in the floor.” Keys thinks. “Oh, and
I also need my Combat Engineer Kit to get it done.”
“Is it possible to
set up dividers?” Ling speaks up as he looks around the room. “Feels open.”
Keys raises his
hands as he makes a viewing square, shaking his head. “It’s a pretty tight
space already. I don’t think we can give fourteen people their own cubicle
without turning this place into a maze.”
Ling grunts,
strolling to the far station on the block Admiral. “I will take this then.”
“I’ll take the one
across.” Keys raises as he stands. “Though, Ling’s right; we could use a few
dividers for decor. Might give the space some ambience and also reduce the
feeling of emptiness.”
Master Sergeant Ling
stops. “Admiral.”
“Yes?” Admiral
Tucker looks up.
“There are no
computer stations here.”
The old man sighs,
getting up from his seat. “I’ll go check if the 4th Task Force’s Office has a
few spares. And Keys, Ling; start filling out requisition forms. Nothing except
this room belongs to the 31st, gotta get this place up and running.”
“Understood
Admiral.” Both Ling and Keys answer at the same time.
As Tucker leaves,
Lieutenant Keys pulls out a standard marker from his uniform, the felt tip
reaching the dry erase surface on the left wall as he begins. “Alright,
requisitions. Start from the top.”
Ling sits down in
the chair, swiveling around to face the board. He stops, mind blanking. “Where
do we start?”
Keys pauses. “Fuck
do we even have a place to live?”
“I thought I was
being reassigned to a navy vessel.” The man admits. “I did not prepare
anything.”
Admiral Tucker
interrupts, three laptops under his arm as he strolls back into the office
space. “Don’t worry I’ve gotten that taken care of. You’re getting your own
rooms in the ring: perks of being special operations, don’t have to live in the
zero-g bunks with the riff raff.”
“Thank Christ
almighty.” The Lieutenant exhales. “Admiral, you are the best command officer
in the S.D.F.”
“I didn’t think
hot bunking was good for morale, especially with just fourteen of us.”
Carefully placing the collected computers down
on the desks, the Admiral pauses. “I hope the Fourth didn't need these.”
“Admiral…”
Defensively
pausing, Admiral Tucker points towards the door. “I asked Admiral Markov if I
could have them and he said sure, I could have them.”
Ling narrows,
glancing over to the man. “Admiral Markov was recommended to his position in
the 4th Task Force by you correct?”
“Ok nobody said
anything about favors. Well, I still remember Nikolai being a small chubby
faced Ensign aboard the Washington.
The only reason he’s here today is thanks to…” The Admiral stops. “Ok, might
have been a personal favor.”
“I’ll knock
computers off the requisitions list.” Keys turns.
“Oh and I lied.”
Tucker raises as he boots up the first machine. “We are getting a T-9 setup kit
courtesy from the Security Council tomorrow morning. That includes most of the
necessities.”
“What isn’t
included?”
Admiral Tucker
thinks. “Anything related to EVAs or combat, snacks, and table lights.”
“And a functioning
water dispenser.” Lieutenant Keys remembers as he writes down the required
materials. “What else?”
Admiral Tucker
silently hands Ling a laptop, the Master Sergeant taking a second to
familiarize himself with the thing. “Keys. We are on a civilian station, if we
need anything we could just go and buy it.”
“True.” Keys
points. “Alright, so for now we’re requisitioning the usual squad complement of
eight combat EVA suits along with standard orbital warfare kits and maintenance
supplies, a pallet of assorted secondary ration menu items, and are we fine with
fixing the water dispenser they give us?”
“I’ll go and buy a
civilian grade one.” Admiral Tucker waves.
“Ok.” Keys
finishes, capping the plastic pen as he admires his writing. “For now, that’s
it.”
Ling suddenly
jolts up. “Oh, I also need ceramic armor plating for modular combat suit. And
if we can add weapons, I want a XA-77.”
“Fancy assault
rifle for a fancy guy.” Tucker scoffs. “Though, that’s not too crazy of a
requisition for a Spec Ops Team. And don’t forget a Combat Engineering Kit for
yourself Keys.”
The Lieutenant
adds the requested items to the list, turning around as he finishes.
“Just to let you
two know; Special Weapons are also on the table.” Admiral Tucker informs. “But
we should get the recruitment out of the way before we really dive deep into
hardware.”
Both Ling and Keys
nod in agreement, turning to the old man.
Admiral Tucker
stands from his chair, strolling to the white board as he motions for the
marker. Removed from his position, Keys joins Ling as he sits on top of one of
the empty tables, resting his feet on the chair as he leans forward. The
Admiral takes a breath. “Feel free to speak up at any time, this isn’t exactly
a normal meeting.”
With acknowledging
stares, Admiral Isaac Tucker begins. “Alright, first and foremost we have a
limit of fourteen personnel. So right now, the max we can recruit is eleven
people.”
The old man draws
out two rectangles, marking down one as NAVAL
and another as MARINE.
Two tallies are
marked down for Naval, and one in Marine.
“Keys should be in
Marine.” Ling argues. “For the reason of combat roles.”
“Fair.” Tucker
acknowledges as he erases the tally under NAVAL.
“Though, for the record Master Sergeant, we’re keeping Combat Engineering under
our wing.”
“Pay’s better.”
Lieutenant Keys shrugs. “And I didn’t slog through two years of engineering
school to be in the marine corps.”
Ling groans, Keys
laughs, and the Admiral continues.
“As our doctrine
is first strike and open warfare, we’ll need a balance between our marines and
naval firepower. Though, first we will need to figure out our naval assets
before our marines, as we require both orbital fire support and deployment
capacity to be combat effective.”
“We’re limited to
Orbital Corvettes correct?” Keys asks.
“Correct.” Admiral
Tucker writes on the margins of the naval section. “Though, this works to our
advantage due to the class’ smaller crew sizes and lower maintenance costs.”
Ling raises a
hand. “So we will need to transfer one Corvette to our Task Force?”
“Correct again.
Currently there are thirty-six corvettes in service within the System Defense
Force separated into four different classes: Panama, Mogwai, Cyclone, and…uh…”
“Yangtze class.”
Ling finishes.
“Yes.” Admiral
Tucker cuts the man a sly, conspiring smile. “Now, the question is which sort
of corvette is our Task Force looking for?”
“Panama and Mogwai
are the oldest.” Keys starts. “I was on the Souez,
which is a Panama Class, before the Beijing.
I don’t think it’s suited for orbital combat support; she was basically falling
apart at her seams.”
“On that I agree.”
The Admiral crosses out.
“And the Mogwai
Class has a crew of twenty.” Ling raises. “That eliminates it.”
“And for the
record I just want to say that that was partially my fault.” Admiral Tucker
stares at the pair with a slightly embarrassed look as he draws a line through
the name. “She should’ve been classified as a destroyer by all merits, but the
old Admiralty Board got a little ambitious.”
“So, two left.”
Keys clasps his hands together as he thinks. “Never been on a Cyclone or
Yangtze Class before.”
“There’s a Cyclone
Class parked here for Fleet Week; the Hurricane.”
Admiral Tucker informs. “If we ask nicely, they’d probably give us a tour.
Captain Yu’s a nice guy, was in one of my task forces back in the day.”
“Cyclone Class was
made for anti-ship.” Ling speaks up suddenly. “Is missile carrier against
country funded hostiles like Java Treaty.”
“That’s correct
Ling.” The old man stops as he smiles. “Which means there’s only one choice.”
“Does the Yangtze
class fulfil our needs though?” Keys raises as he leans back. “There’s no point
in looking into the class if it doesn’t do anything for us.”
“Cyclone Orbital
Combat Corvettes are built for deployment endurance, operational support, and
have a complement of eight souls. I’ll admit that the class was the design
board’s backburner project for a good while but it’ll work for us.”
Satisfied, Keys
nods as the Admiral continues.
“Currently there
are three Yangtze Class Corvettes in service. The Lead Ship Yangtze herself, courtesy of your home
country’s sponsorship Ling; Yenisei from
the Russians, and the Rubicon from
the Euros.”
“A mostly
international class.” Keys comments.
Admiral Tucker
chuckles, pointing the marker at the man. “Don’t worry Lieutenant, good o’ll
America’s gonna be sponsoring the next one. Then we’ll get our representative
river up there.”
The Admiral
finishes writing down the ships, each one organized into its own column. “So,
given that the Yangtzes are a relatively recent production line, we can assume
that they offer equal performance on technical specs. Which means our selection
criteria is now based on crew personality, efficiency, and most importantly
each Captain’s skill set.”
Silence
propagates, Keys suddenly realizing the lack of movement from his companion.
“All due respect
Admiral but who the hell would even join a Task Force such as ours?” Keys
interrupts. “Zero oversight and no credit, I can’t think of a commanding
officer who’d want to willingly get transferred to a group like this.”
Admiral Tucker
snaps his fingers, pointing to the man with the marker. “Lieutenant Keys has a
point, which means the question that should be asked is: Out of these three
corvettes, which Captain would be willing to transfer their vessel and crew to
a task force that operates in a manner such as ours.”
Without a reply,
the Admiral continues. “I’ll offer some criteria, just for fun.
“We’ll need an
individual who values the lives of civilians and crew over personal glory, and
one who can reliably hold classified information. Standard stuff, though, given
our rules of operation this person will also need uncompromising morals, and
holds a deep care for the Solar System Defense Force. But at the same time,
this officer needs to be vocally frustrated at the current methods employed by
the S.D.F. And I want to just say, a ballpark here, that this theoretical
person will need at least… I don’t know…
four years of experience in command as well as a full set of awards.
Possibly, these could include a White Combat Star, Meritorious Service Medal,
and possibly a Purple Heart. Does that ring a bell for any of you?”
Ling’s expression
sinks, eyes wide as he turns to the Admiral in utter silence. “Oh no.”
“Master Sergeant
Shu Ling, may you remind us of your professional connection to the woman you
agreed to marry about six months ago?”
“OH FUCK.”
Lieutenant Keys jumps up as he slaps Ling on the shoulder, wild laugh echoing
in the office. “LING!”
“... and that is an order.” The Admiral blankly
states.
Ling stares into
the white board, eyes unmet. “Captain Michelle Pérez. Commanding Officer of the
Yangtze Class Corvette Rubicon.”
Admiral Tucker
points at the whiteboard, crossing out two and circling one. “It seems that we
have arrived at our chosen naval asset.”
“Is this the
reason I was transferred here?” Ling asks with a surprised look.
“No, of course
not.” The Admiral tilts his head curiously. “I just wanted one of the best
marines in low earth orbit. The fact that he came bundled with a decorated war
hero and a corvette was icing on the cake.”
“Ha!” Keys shakes
Ling, bright smile on his face. “Now who gets to serve with their fiancé you
lucky dog.”
“哎呀.”
Ling’s expression droops. “Is she our best choice?”
“Oh trust me,
Captain Pérez is.” Admiral Tucker coldly, and honestly informs. “With five
thousand active service members the recruitment pool for the System Defense
Force was fucking small.”
“Small world,
smaller force.” Keys shrugs, raising his hand slightly. “Though I have a
question sir.”
“Go ahead.”
“How are we going
to get the Rubicon transferred to us?
We can’t just go and ask can we?”
“Rubicon’s currently based in Lunar
Anchorage under Task Force Seven. Vice Admiral Jacqueline Caron’s an absolute
pain in the fucking ass but I know her. I’ll take care of the transfer; we’ll
get the corvette, crew and all, so don’t you guys worry.”
“Should I tell
Pérez?” Ling speaks up. “About the transfer. It is not likely she will accept
this as she does not enjoy being switched from task force to task force.”
“Not to overstep
my boundaries with your betrothed,
but I’m pretty she’s very disgruntled out in Lunar Orbit.” The Admiral answers.
“Right?”
Ling sighs, the
life force leaving his body for a moment. “She has expressed her… dislike for
the area.”
Lieutenant Keys
nudges the man’s shoulder. “Plus the psycho would do anything to serve with you
again Ling. Anything.”
“Alright then it’s
confirmed!” Admiral Tucker reorients, attention focusing back towards him. “Now
that’s taken care of we move onto your two’s expertise.”
Marking down eight
tallies on the naval section, the remaining three marks are focused on towards
the Marine section.
“Just barely
larger than a fireteam.” Keys comments as he counts. “Damn the marine side of
this task force is going to be light.”
“Which is why you
two need to make the selections carefully.” The Admiral tosses the marker back
to Keys with a learned trajectory, the thing’s path curving as the momentum of
the spinning gravity ring brings it to the Lieutenant’s outstretched catching
hand. “No restrictions for this one; marines, national space force personnel,
even military contractors as long as you can get them to join the System
Defense Force.”
“Anyone?!” Ling
immediately stops.
“Anyone.” The
Admiral pauses as he rethinks his words. “Well, anyone can be a candidate. The question is on if they’re
willing to transfer to our Task Force or join the System Defense Force. I can
pull some clout with the U.N. Security Council and Orbital Security Company,
but this will be on a person to person basis.”
“Hmmm.” Keys
thinks. “Then we’ll need to cover all operational sectors with these three
recruits.”
Ling nods. “Total
squad needs minimum rifleman, medic, demolitions, breacher, and marksman.”
“Combat
Engineering covers the demolitions and riflemen courses, a little bit of medic
if we want to push it like last time.” Keys shrugs. “And Ling you’re a wizard
with an anti-material rifle.”
“I am not that
good.” Ling informs. “And I much prefer to be in the middle of a fight.”
“I mean…”
Out of nowhere a
pen is snatched from thin air, the movement of flesh and uniform a blur against
the peaceful office space. The Master Sergeant turns to face its thrower with a
confused look.
Admiral Tucker
chuckles, placing his handful of improvised munitions back on the desk as he
pulls out his phone. “You see that Lieutenant? That’s the reaction time of a
person you want at the front.”
“Yeah agreed, and
Ling you still carry around that emergency escape hammer for close quarters
combat?” Keys asks.
From his right
pocket the man produces a small black cylinder. Shaped like a detonator, the
single button on the tool was opposite of a pointed metal bit. Spring loaded,
the Master Sergeant activates the hammer, the sharp edge shooting out at
incredible speed.
Admiral Tucker
hums, a slightly concerned look on his face. “I never told you about this
Master Sergeant but using that thing might be a war crime now.”
“Better than a
knife or one of those Java Treaty machetes.” Keys stops as he nervously turns
to Ling. “I mean, I’d much rather go out with someone breaking my helmet visor
than gutting me alive in vacuum.”
Ling nods,
pressing the metal tip back into the outer casing. “Plus, very reliable. Used
it seven times, worked seven times. Very quick, but also very messy. Lots of
glass.”
Images flash in
memory, both Lieutenant and Admiral shaking away brutal close quarters combat.
“So, we got a
rifleman and breacher then.” Keys turns back to Admiral Tucker, sliding off the
desk and onto a standing position. “Sir, is it possible for you to provide us
with a full listing of current active marine squads, retired personnel under
the age of fifty, Vacuum Exiles astro-operators, and all national Space Force
marines?”
The old man takes
a moment as he stops mid-dial, processing the Lieutenant’s words as he glances
down at his phone. “I’ll see what I can do.”
“Preferably in
spreadsheets.” Keys adds.
“We are looking at
Vacuum Exiles now?” Ling stops. “That is risky.”
“Well, the Orbital
Security Company only recruits ex-System Defense Force Marines for their Vacuum
Exiles division.” Keys explains. “And if we can get our hands on one of their
‘astro-operators’ we’d be set for whatever role they fill.”
Ling frowns. “I have gotten into a few
shootouts with the Vacuum Exiles. Not sure if they are a good fit.”
“I’ve shot up a
few as well.” Lieutenant Keys admits. “But this isn’t a customs inspection,
we’re talking about a unified Task Force. Plus, I think some of them would like
a change of pace; same pay but with less oversight.”
Ling thinks,
turning towards Admiral Tucker’s desk. “Admiral, does hiring P.M.C.s count
toward the limit of…”
Speaking on his
personal phone, the old man looks up in the midst of conversation. A single
hand cuts across his throat, the reply on the other end finishing as his
intense glare turns into a soft smile. “... Yes I completely agree with you
Jackie; the Budget for the Seventh Task Force has always been a nightmare to
balance. You might not know this but a while back Vice Admiral Li actually… yes
I know…but he actually managed to solve the budget balance issue with his own
Force but…mhm…”
“操的妈...” Ling stares. “Look at the man. See how the
conversation goes, he owns it.”
Keys listens in
idly, a few words lost as his focus is bent to his assigned computer.
“... well of
course. I mean the Rubicon…” The old
man laughs. “Oh no I’m not trying anything, really!”
Admiral Tucker
smiles with evil intent. “Oh don’t be so stubborn Jackie. I honestly believe
Captain Pérez really has turned into a liability within the Seventh Task
Force…. yes exactly, just like I said!”
“当枪使...” Ling comments, nudging Keys. “Do you think he can do
this?”
“Let the Admiral
do his magic Ling.” The Lieutenant comments. “He’s got twenty-five years of
political experience at the head of the S.D.F., he’ll get you your girlfriend.”
The Master
Sergeant frowns, leaning in as his voice turns into a whisper. “I have a question.”
“Yeah?” Lieutenant
Keys turns, tone following suit.
“Why is the
Admiral commanding this Task Force? Seems strange that he would command such a
Task Force before retirement.”
Keys glances at
the old man, answering in an equally hushed tone. “Admiral’s probably gonna be
the first lifer of the System Defense Force, not the retiring kind of guy.”
“I understand
that.” Ling nods. “But why us now?”
“Ling this Task
Force will probably be his last project before the Orbital Security Council
force votes him into retirement. He’s the last founding officer still in active
duty, man’s getting old. He probably wants to go out with a bang.”
For a moment
Master Sergeant Ling stops, reaching back into his memories as he chuckles.
“Remember what I said while we were on the Beijing?”
“You said a lot of
stuff back on the Beijing.” Keys
scoffs.
“It was the time I
talked about plans, when Admiral Tucker interrupted.”
Keys turns as he
remembers. “Was that when you were explaining to me about your plan to propose
to Michelle?” The man cuts a slightly pitiful smile. “Where you laid out this
gigantic, intricate plan about the whole proposal happening during an Earth
Rise on Luna Anchorage and you had the ring stowed away and…”
Ling’s expression
turns neutral. “Yes, that one.”
“Then the Admiral
floated in and said that no plan survives first contact, and then Captain Pérez
called you right there and asked if you wanted to get married.”
“See you
remember.” Ling points. “It is just like then now.”
“How so?”
The Master
Sergeant hums. “We have laid out an intricate plan of attack, have ambitions
for this Task Force. In reality, it will be very different. Admiral Tucker has
general idea of how this thing will work out, but now I do not think he is
taking his own advice.”
“That’s just the
Admiral.” Keys sighs. “But between you and me, if we’re taking the fight to
people like the Java Treaty and South American Alliance then it’s going to be
war. Shit will hit the fan.”
Ling nods. “Hopefully,
we start small. Space Liberation Font and pirates are easy target for Task
Force such as us.”
“That they are.”
Keys agrees.
Ling takes a
minute, taking in the room as he meditates. “So, how many candidates do we need
to choose?”
“A minimum of
twelve.” The Lieutenant stops as he rubs his temple. “And we’re choosing out of
like one thousand marines, three hundred Vacuum Exiles, and I don’t even know
how much each country supports in their Space Forces now.”
“Then we have lots
of work.” Ling states.
“Yep.” Keys
pauses, a smirk approaching on his neutral expression. “Plus, you need to carve
out some time to buy something nice. Pretty sure Captain Pérez doesn’t want to
see you empty handed when she arrives.”
Ling’s face
slacks. “Right…”
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